4 resultados para Cut Flowers
em Universidad del Rosario, Colombia
Resumo:
El objetivo de esta monografía es analizar el desarrollo del comercio exterior de las flores colombianas en la Unión Europea, en especial con Reino Unido y España en los próximos años, reconociendo los marcos bajo los cuales ha sido dirigido este intercambio.
Resumo:
Colombia es uno de los principales productores de flores y rosas a nivel mundial y a través de los años ha presentado diversos problemas en la actividad industrial que permite la recolección de rosas. La cosecha y alistamiento del producto se realiza mediante actividades principalmente manuales. El corte de la rosa se efectúa con una herramienta conocida como tijera de poda manual, lo cual ha dado lugar a problemas ergonómicos al efectuar el corte, particularmente evidentes en personas de manos pequeñas, pues la apertura de operación excede la longitud máxima de extensión y capacidad de agarre de la mano, lo que conlleva a esfuerzos y posturas perjudiciales, especialmente desviaciones ulnares/radiales y flexión/extensión pronunciada de muñeca, permitiendo la aparición de lesiones por trauma acumulativo en el conjunto mano-muñeca. Este trabajo evalúa un nuevo diseño de tijera de poda manual concebida para disminuir el problema de posturas perjudiciales de la muñeca en el momento del corte. Se trata de un estudio cuasi-experimental, de observaciones pareadas, que permitió evaluar el nuevo diseño de tijera en condiciones reales de uso durante una fracción de la jornada de trabajo, donde los operarios la pudieron comparar con su tijera convencional y pudieron calificar las características de diseño de cada una de ellas a través de una escala de intervalo con rostros felices a tristes. Factores novedosos como el sistema de agarre con mango rotativo fueron bien aceptados en la nueva tijera, así como la suavidad en el accionamiento. El peso de la nueva herramienta es mayor a la actual y no fue bien aceptado. Personas de mayor edad y con mayor tiempo en el cargo muestran una preferencia hacia la tijera de poda que utilizan actualmente.
Resumo:
OBJECTIVES: The aims of this study were to establish a Colombian smoothed centile charts and LMS tables for tríceps, subscapular and sum tríceps+subscapular skinfolds; appropriate cut-offs were selected using receiver operating characteristic analysis based in a populationbased sample of schoolchildren in Bogota, Colombia and to compare them with international studies. METHODS: A total of 9 618 children and adolescents attending public schools in Bogota, Colombia (55.7% girls; age range of 9–17.9 years). Height, weight, body mass index (BMI), waist circumference, triceps and subscapular skinfold measurements were obtained using standardized methods. We have calculated tríceps+subscapular skinfold (T+SS) sum. Smoothed percentile curves for triceps and subscapular skinfold thickness were derived by the LMS method. Receiver operating characteristics curve (ROC) analyses were used to evaluate the optimal cut-off point of tríceps, subscapular and sum tríceps+subscapular skinfolds for overweight and obesity based on the International Obesity Task Force (IOTF) definitions. Data were compared with international studies. RESULTS: Subscapular, triceps skinfolds and T+SS were significantly higher in girls than in boys (P <0.001). The median values for triceps, subscapular as well as T+SS skinfold thickness increased in a sex-specific pattern with age. The ROC analysis showed that subscapular, triceps skinfolds and T+SS have a high discrimination power in the identification of overweight and obesity in the sample population in this study. Based on the raw non-adjusted data, we found that Colombian boys and girls had high triceps and subscapular skinfolds values than their counterparts from Spain, UK, German and US. CONCLUSIONS: Our results provide sex- and age-specific normative reference standards for the triceps and subscapular skinfold thickness values in a large, population-based sample of 3 schoolchildren and adolescents from an Latin-American population. By providing LMS tables for Latin-American people based on Colombian reference data, we hope to provide quantitative tools for the study of obesity and its complications.
Resumo:
Abstract Objective: Evidence shows an association between muscular strength (MS) and health among youth, however low muscular strength cut-points for the detection of high metabolic risk in Latin-American populations are scarce. The aim of this study was two-fold: to explore potential age- and sex-specific thresholds of MS, for optimal cardiometabolic risk categorization among Colombian children and adolescents; and to investigate if cardiometabolic risk differed by MS group by applying the receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC) cut point. Methods: This is a secondary analysis of a cross-sectional study (the FUPRECOL study), published elsewhere. The FUPRECOL study assessments were conducted during the 2014– 2015 school year. MS was estimated by a handle dynamometer on 1,950 children and adolescents from Colombia, using the MS relative to weight (handgrip strength/body mass). A metabolic risk score was computed from the following components: waist circumference, triglycerides, HDL-c, glucose, systolic and diastolic blood pressure. ROC analysis showed a significant discriminatory accuracy of MS in identifying the low/high metabolic risk in children and adolescents and both gender. Results: In children, handgrip strength/body mass level for a low metabolic risk were 0.359 and 0.376 in girls and boys, respectively. In adolescents, these points were 0.440 and 0.447 in girls and boys, respectively. Conclusion: In conclusion, the results suggest a hypothetical MS level relative to weight for having a low metabolic risk, which could be used to identify youths at risk.